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XXL Magazine > Hip-Hop Massive > Street Report
1luv
I don't know who the snitch is on this one, but ya"ll know, if ya"ll read my other threads, the police don't make drug bust like this without someone snitching.
How much drugs do ya"ll think they got off Cleveland streets?
Did they just get rid of a rival for a snitch to operate?
I will credit them for getting them guns off the street.
It's going to be a hot summer fam.

http://www.newsnet5.com/news/19253030/detail.html

CLEVELAND -- Cleveland police said they busted a major drug trafficking ring Wednesday and 16 suspects are now facing charges.

The suspects range in age from 23 to 58. During a news conference, police said the suspects were indicted for allegedly selling in the Garden Valley Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority housing area and throughout the east side of Cleveland.
Cleveland police, CMHA police, the Cuyahoga County Sheriff's Department, the FBI, the Drug Enforcement Agency and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco Firearms and Explosives were all involved in the crackdown Wednesday morning.
Besides stopping a major cocaine dealing operation, police also got a bunch of guns off the streets, including an AK-47.

"Gun violence is top of our list and we'll go after those terrorizing people in this community," said Cleveland Police Chief Michael McGrath.
Police used wire taps of cell phones and undercover buys to collect evidence.
Fourteen of the 16 people indicted have been arrested. Police continue to look for two other suspects.

The how and the who is just scenery for the public. Keeps 'em guessing, prevents 'em from asking the most important question, Who benefited? Who has the power to cover it up? Who? One may smile and smile and be a villain."

One!
1luv
The FBI informants stepped up they game a long time ago, and it's to many hustlers that don't f@$!$ with the internet to see what's going on. To many young girls out there quick to make a introduction to the new ni#%$ they just met.

Following the narco-trafficking business is like playing in a three-card Monte tournament. Only the dealers know where the real cards are at any given time, despite press and law enforcement reports to the contrary. It's impossible to know where the right cards are at any given time, and that is by design.

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blog.cleveland.com/metro/2008/06/drug_pr...

Bray, 35, would later admit that he had his own motives for working as an informant. He had dealt crack cocaine since getting out of prison in 2004 and wanted to eliminate his competition.

Bray planned to increase his share of the drug market by bringing down rivals. The way to do that? Pass along information to the DEA that would be used to arrest the rivals.

And if that didn't work, Bray could always lie about who was selling him the drugs. He set up people he hated, those who made fun of the chubby street dealer.

Because Lucas and Ansari relied on Bray to identify the people selling them drugs, Bray was able to use "stand-ins." He gave his friends cocaine and then told them to meet him with Lucas or Ansari. Bray's friends handed the drugs over to the undercover officers, who then paid them.

Because no arrests were made at the time of the deals, the stand-ins could walk away, and Bray could later identify others as the dealers. Read the article in the paper>blog.cleveland.com/metro/2008/06/drug_pr...

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As a paid informant for the Drug Enforcement Administration, Guillermo Francisco Jordan-Pollito has achieved a remarkable record of success. Over the last 10 years, according to his own testimony in Los Angeles federal court, the former Mexican police officer has earned more than $400,000 in cash helping the DEA, the FBI, the Secret Service, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, the California Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement, the L.A. County Sheriff's Department, and the Santa Ana Police Department put together numerous cases against suspected sellers of cocaine, methamphetamines and other illicit drugs.

There's just one thing missing from that picture. The DEA's star undercover operative used a stable of his own paid informants to assist him in setting up drug buys, a fact that was kept from defense lawyers in an undetermined number of those cases.

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Now, don't get it twisted, I'm not for criminals, but I seen to much corruption to many fake n$#&% playing a character out there, ball'en, using young women to meet hustlers to frame & set-up a young black brother to do the time they was scared to do. But, that's the game, don't play if you don't know how to. That's the risk you take. But, is it justice for a non government agent or a non police officer to set-up people just to get them out the way so they can sell. How is the State & Justice Department cleaning up the streets with government informants selling. I bet Eric Holder don't know nothing about that part of the game, and Mexico and other regions, where the real drugs really come into this country, is a whole other ball game. It's a machine you can't win.

Think about this, when they moved on them the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco Firearms and Explosives was on the scene which means they knew they had guns. The FBI was on the scene, so they knew about their operation for a while, which means they had someone on the inside. They knew just when. The suspects range in age from 23 to 58, let me say this again, 58 years old, he is going to spend the better part of his golden years behind bars, he may even die in prison. I don't care what kind of money he had out here on the street, when he eat'en 3 meals a day & soups or what ever else he can afford in prison, in one year that money is going to seem like he never had it, just a memory.

They'll get they respect, if they got dough coming in, while they in prison, because they sold weight co's and broke inmates always show inmates that was heavy in the game love.

The how and the who is just scenery for the public. Keeps 'em guessing, prevents 'em from asking the most important question, Who benefited? Who has the power to cover it up? Who? One may smile and smile and be a villain."

One!
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